About this guide
The questions, discussion topics, and author biography that follow are intended to enhance your group's
reading of Sapphire's Push. We hope they will aid your understanding of this vibrant and
powerful first novel by one of America's most controversial poets. "Don't nobody want me. Don't
nobody need me. I know who I am...ugly black grease to be wipe away, punish, kilt, changed, finded a job
for"[p. 33]. This is the voice of Precious Jones, a viciously abused Harlem girl. At sixteen, Precious is
pregnant-for the second time-with her own father's child, and regularly beaten and ordered around by her
jealous, reclusive mother. Though she sits dutifully in class every day-"I always did like school, jus' seem
school never did like me"[p. 38]-she has remained completely illiterate. Her life seems set to repeat the
self-destructive pattern of her mother's, until her principal sends her to an alternative reading class
where, with the help of a dedicated teacher and fellow students who have undergone experiences as
harrowing as her own, she begins an intoxicating discovery of words, friendship, and, in the process,
herself. Precious's voice-stark and crude yet filled with raw intelligence and even humor-demands to
be heard and, once heard, will prove unforgettable.
For discussion
- What does this story tell us about the inadequacy of ordinary schools to deal
with students' problems and with their resulting learning handicaps? "I got A in
English and never say nuffin', do nuffin'"[p. 51], Precious says. Precious's
principal in effect tells her teacher to give up on her, saying "Focus on the
ones who can learn"[p. 39]. Is this an understandable or forgivable attitude? How
would you describe Mr. Wicher and his teaching methods? Is he merely a coward or
is he trying his best?
- "The tesses paint a picture of me wif no
brain,"says Precious. "The tesses paint a picture of me an' my muver-my whole
family, we more than dumb, we invisible"[p. 33]. In what way are Precious and her
family members invisible to the larger world? If you have read Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man, can you
compare the way the two authors use the metaphor of invisibility for their
characters?
- During the course of the story, Precious is obliged to confront her own
prejudices and modify or reject them. Her experience with the Hispanic EMS man
makes her look at Hispanics for the first time as human beings like herself; her
friendship with Ms. Rain and Jermaine makes her reexamine her knee-jerk
homophobia. Early in the novel she says, "I hate crack addicts. They give the
race a bad name"[p. 14], but later she questions that uncompromising position. In
an interview, Sapphire said of Precious that "she doesn't know that hating
gay people or hating Jews or hating foreigners is detrimental to her"
(Interview, June 1996). Why is it detrimental to her? Why is it imperative
that she lose her prejudices before she, herself, can be helped?
- How
would you describe Precious's self-image at the beginning of the book, and how
would you describe it at the end? How have her friends and supporters succeeded
in helping to alter her view of herself?
- What is Precious's attitude
toward Louis Farrakhan and his movement at the beginning of the story? How does
this attitude change during the course of her education? Why have Farrakhan and
his opinions become such a vital part of her world view? What do you deduce the
author's attitude toward him to be?
- A famous-or perhaps infamous-Labor
Department study, the Moynihan Report, blamed the absence of fathers and the
dominance of women (rather than economic and racial inequality) for the problems
confronting the African American family. Many black scholars and activists have
argued against the report's conclusions. Which side of the argument do you
believe Push to support?
- Push presents what one reviewer
called "one of the most disturbing portraits of motherhood ever published"
(City Paper, November 1996). How would you explain or interpret Precious's
mother's behavior?
- "Miz Rain say we is a nation of raped children, that
the black man in America today is the product of rape"[p. 70Ð71]. What does Ms.
Rain mean by this metaphor, and does it strike you as an accurate one?
- Precious tells Ms. Rain that the welfare helps her mother, to which Ms. Rain
responds, "When you get home from the hospital look and see how much welfare has
helped your mother"[p. 75]. What does this novel indicate about abuses and
inadequacies in the system? How might an ideal system be constructed?
- Precious's file reflects the government "workfare" point of view, that
Precious should already be earning her own living, possibly as a home attendant.
Precious objects violently to this idea. Can you understand the social worker's
point of view? Have Precious's and Jermaine's arguments [pp. 123-125] changed any
opinions you previously held on this subject?
- "Miz Rain say value. Values
determine how we live much as money do. I say Miz Rain stupid there. All I can
think she don't know to have NOTHIN'"[p. 66]. Which opinion do you agree with, or
is there something to be said for both? What answer, if any, does the novel
offer?
- "One of the myths we've been taught," Sapphire has said, "is that
oppression creates moral superiority. I'm here to tell you that the more
oppressed a person is, the more oppressive they will be" (Bomb, Fall 1996). How
does the novel illustrate the concept of the cycle of abuse? How does Precious
break that cycle, and what aspects of her own character enable her to do so?
- Push has been called a Dickensian novel, to which Sapphire has
responded, "Part of what's so wrong in this story is that we're not in a
Dickensian era. Those things shouldn't be happening in a post-industrial society"
(Bomb, Fall 1996). She sees the novel as "an indictment of American culture,
which is both black and white" (ibid). What aspects of our culture have enabled
the inequities described in the novel to develop? Would you say that contemporary
American cities consist, as Dickens's London was said to, of two entirely
different cultures, the rich one and the poor?
- Why do you think
Sapphire has chosen to end the story where she does? Does the book end on
a sad or hopeful note? What sort of future do you envision for Precious?
- What is the significance of the novel's title, Push? At what points in
her life is Precious enjoined to "push"? What is meant by this word, and how does
Precious respond to the injunctions?
Suggestions for further reading
Maya Angelou, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings; Anonymous, Go Ask
Alice; James Baldwin, Nobody Knows My Name; Robert Coles, Children
of Crisis; J. California Cooper, A Piece of Mine; Edwidge Danticat,
Breath, Eyes, Memory; Charles Dickens, Oliver Twist; Ralph Ellison,
Invisible Man; Anne
Frank, The Diary of a Young Girl; Ernest J. Gaines, A Lesson Before Dying; Kaye
Gibbons, Ellen Foster;
Langston Hughes, Selected Poems; Jamaica Kincaid, Autobiography of My
Mother; Amy Tan, The Joy Luck Club; Alex Kotlowitz, There Are No
Children Here; Frank McCourt, Angela's Ashes; Toni Morrison,
Beloved; The Bluest Eye; Song of Solomon; Sula; J. D.
Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye; Esmeralda Santiago, When I Was Puerto Rican; Mark
Twain, Huckleberry Finn; Alice Walker, The Color Purple; Richard
Wright, Black Boy.
Also by Sapphire, available from Vintage Books:
Also available from Random House AudioBooks:
- Push, $18.00, 0-679-45168-4
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